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Duplicity

Duplicity (2009)

2h 5m | PG-13

⭐ 5.895 / 10

Two romantically involved corporate spies team up to manipulate a race to corner the market on a medical innovation that will reap huge profits and allow them to lead an extravagant lifestyle together.

Director: Tony Gilroy

Studio: Medienproduktion Poseidon Filmgesellschaft

Genre: Romance, Comedy, Crime

Video: 720p

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Cast

Julia Roberts

Julia Roberts

as Claire Stenwick

Clive Owen

Clive Owen

as Ray Koval

Tom Wilkinson

Tom Wilkinson

as Howard Tully

Paul Giamatti

Paul Giamatti

as Richard Garsik

Tom McCarthy

Tom McCarthy

as Jeff Bauer

Denis O'Hare

Denis O'Hare

as Duke Monahan

Reviews

By Andre Gonzales

Kind of a dumb movie. They were trying to commit espionage but failed. Even if it worked it was still a boring movie with no results.

By CinemaSerf

This is a bit of a mess. It centres around the antics of former CIA operative "Claire" (Julia Roberts) and her ex-MI6 equivalent "Ray" (Clive Owen) who had a very brief dalliance five years earlier that saw him with an hangover and some egg on his face. Now, employed in the private sector, he encounters her at Grand Central station in New York whilst he is on a job only to discover that she is still in the same line of work too - and it's industrial secrets being bartered this time. They both know that a ground-breaking announcement is due imminently, so conclude that maybe the best plan is for them to do some of thieving for themselves and pocket a cool $35 million. The thing is that even though their romance is burgeoning, they still don't quite trust each other - and neither do we. Nor, I have to say, did I really care. Roberts tries quite hard here but Owen only ever really had eye-candy value and here is little different. Tom Wilkinson sports an unnecessary American accent as the owner of the magic formula and Paul Giamatti appears sparingly as the man determined to pinch it, but once we get the gist of the premiss the thing just recycles itself and for the next two hours we sort of keep going round the same block. The story is quite weakly written with some fairly formulaic attempts at comedy and a denouement that is hardly a surprise if you're still remotely paying attention. Perhaps it might have worked better with a stronger leading man but...